The present invention relates to the technical field of mass analysis, and more specifically to an ion optical device.
For a mass analyzer operating under a scanning mode (such as a quadrupole) or under a pulse mode (such as time of flight, an electrostatic ion trap, etc.), when a flow of ions having a wide mass to charge ratio range is analyzed, ions outside a specific range of mass to charge ratios may be subjected to strength discrimination or cannot be used due to the inconsistency between the mass to charge ratio range of ions that can be analyzed instantaneously by the mass analyzer and that of the flow of ions, which may greatly affect the sensitivity and mass discrimination of mass spectrometers using these mass analyzers, such as a triple quadrupole, a tandem quadrupole-time of flight mass spectrometer or an electrostatic Orbitrap mass spectrometer. The traditional way to solve this problem includes:
A. Using an ion storage device to store the ions and discharging the ions synchronously according to the requirements of a mass analyzer of a subsequent stage.
B. Adding a mass-selective pseudo potential barrier or a fringe field structure at an end part of an ion guide, or modulating the ion ejection in conjunction with mass-selective resonances.
C. Using an additional ion guide or storage structure to temporarily store ions of a preceding stage in the time of flight analyzer, etc., and carrying out ion release and analysis according to its operating time sequence.
D. Using additional acceleration and deceleration lenses to ensure that the ions are sequentially synchronous with a time sequence of the following-stage mass analyzer at a controlled time.
However, the above methods has limitations:
As for A, a linear ion trap described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,208,728, 7,323,683 and a so-called Scanwave™ technology described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,184,039 are taken as an example. In such a mode, the ions are directly constrained by a DC potential produced by a plurality of axially arranged electrodes or by a radio-frequency pseudo potential. In addition, in this mode, axial transport control and mass-selective ejection of the ions are controlled by the same potential barrier formed axially, and the ion ejection and mass separation occur in the same direction. Since any ion storage device has a certain storage limit, the potential barrier has non-linear responses to mass selection when the ion flow exceeds the limit. Besides, the storage device itself may cause trailing, post-heating of the released ions due to the presence of a gas pressure or bound radio-frequency, and there are restrains on the extra high vacuum of a high-resolution mass analyzer, such that a certain transition distance generally exists between the analyzer and the ion storage device. Even though the released ions are synchronous with the time sequence of the following-stage mass analyzer, the mass discrimination occurs again due to different speeds of ions of different mass to charge ratios after the transition distance has been traveled.
B. Taken as an example is a secondary quadrupole DC potential well established in a length direction of an ion optical device through a multi-discrete electrode structure as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,227,151, 8,487,248, etc., or a pseudo potential barrier featuring mass separation which is formed by using multiple spatial radio-frequency potential waveforms of different wavelengths through introducing an axial periodic electrode structure as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,299,443, 9,177,776. In these methods, the mass separation potential barrier is axially positioned with respect to the ion transfer, and its fringe field structure itself may damage cooling and mass characteristics of the ions in a field axis. For quick ejection of the ions, an axial resonance excitation means that is introduced may enable greater energy distribution of the ions in an ejection direction, which may destroy resolution characteristics of high-resolution analyzers such as the quadrupole, time of flight and electrostatic ion trap analyzers, due to the deterioration of initial phase space distribution.
C. U.S. Pat. No. 7,582,864 is taken as a representative, in which an on-axis radio-frequency potential is achieved by using a two-phase amplitude-asymmetric radio frequency, and by combining the radio-frequency potential with a multipole field of electrodes induced by an end DC, ions are ejected in an order from large to small in terms of axial mass to charge ratio. However, such a guide or storage structure itself easily damages the perfection of the field of the analyzer due to the axial non-zero radio-frequency potential, thereby adding to the complexity of conditions required for subsequent ion focusing. Furthermore, asymmetric radio-frequency waveforms required by the guide or the storage structure may cause deterioration of the energy and spatial distribution of the ions upon release of the ions.
D. U.S. Pat. No. 8,754,367 is taken as a representative, in which a time-varying electric field is used firstly to separate ions of different mass to charge ratios, then its spatial position is used for constructing a non-linear electric field acceleration so as to allow the ions to finally enter an acceleration area of the time of flight at the same time. Although the ions may be well focused axially by this means, the axial non-linear electric field is inevitably accompanied by a huge non-linear divergent electric field radially according to the Laplace equation for electric field distribution. According to Liouville theorem, the temporal distribution of ions is compressed by this method, but sacrifices of radial space and energy focusing characteristics are inevitable, which is extraordinarily disadvantageous to high-resolution quadrupole, time of flight and electrostatic ion trap analyzers.
In view of the drawbacks in the above existing technologies, the present invention aims to develop an ion optical device capable of axial transport (i.e., in a first direction). By manipulating the position, height or gradient direction of a potential barrier in a radial direction (i.e., a second direction), ions are introduced and transported to a first area at one side of the potential barrier. By changing the position, height or gradient direction of the potential barrier, the ions transported or stored in the first area may be transferred to a second area for storage or transport according to the mass to charge ratio or mobility of the ions. Thus, a mode of modulating a time sequence of the mass spectrometry or mobility spectrometry of the ions ejected from the ion optical device along an axial direction is finally achieved, thereby improving the ion utilization efficacy of other downstream devices operating synchronously therewith, especially a time of flight or electrostatic trap detector operating in the pulse mode. For a quadrupole mass analyzer, since a time for ion feeding may also be synchronized with a mass analysis channel of the quadrupole after modulation, the overall efficacy for sensitivity analysis may also be improved when such a mass analyzer operates in a scanning mode.
In order to achieve the foregoing and other related objects, the present invention provides an ion optical device, comprising: one or more pairs of confinement electrode units arranged opposite to each other at two sides of the first direction in a space and extending along the first direction; an ion inlet positioned upstream of the first direction for introducing ions along the first direction; a power supply device for applying opposite radio-frequency voltages to the pairs of confinement electrode units respectively and forming on the confinement electrode units a plurality of DC potentials which are distributed in a second direction substantially orthogonal to the first direction so as to form a potential barrier in the second direction over at least a portion of the length of the first direction; at least one first area and at least one second area positioned in the space at two sides of the potential barrier in the second direction; and a control device connected with the power supply device for controlling an output of the power supply device to change the potential barrier so as to manipulate the transfer of the ions transported or stored in the first area to the second area through the potential barrier in different ways based on the mass to charge ratio or mobility of the ions. Since the control and transport of the ions occur in the first direction while the distinguishment and separation in the second direction, the electric fields required by them are orthogonalized, and thus the contradictory problem of axial cooled transport and axial mass separation discussed in the background is avoided.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the control device is used for manipulating an output amplitude or frequency of the power supply device to adjust the position, height or direction of the potential barrier.
In an embodiment of the present invention, ions in the second area are to be ejected from the ion optical device along the first direction.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the ion optical device comprises an extraction electrode unit arranged downstream of the second area and connected with an outlet of the ion optical device for ejecting the ions in the second area out of the ion optical device along the first direction.
In an embodiment of the present invention, a periodic pulse voltage used for effecting ejection of the ions is applied to the extraction electrode unit.
In an embodiment of the present invention, a following stage of the ion optical device is provided with a mass analyzer to which the control device is connected. The control device is used to control the power supply device and the mass analyzer to match the mass to charge ratio or mobility of the ions transferred to the second area for ejection with an ion mass needing analysis that is set by the control device for the mass analyzer.
In an embodiment of the present invention, each confinement electrode unit comprises a plurality of electrodes arranged along the second direction. Radio-frequency voltages of opposite phases and DC voltages are applied to adjacent electrodes. The electrodes of two paired confinement electrode units form one-to-one pairs, and radio-frequency voltages of opposite phases are applied to two paired electrodes, respectively.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the electrodes of each confinement electrode unit are spaced apart in parallel.
In an embodiment of the present invention, each confinement electrode unit comprises more than 3 electrodes.
In an embodiment of the present invention, there is a collision gas in the space.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the collision gas has a pressure ranging from 0.1 to 10 Pa.
In an embodiment of the present invention, an opening angle greater than 0 but less than 50 degrees is formed between the paired confinement electrode units for introducing a DC penetration field in the first direction and for compressing and transporting ions downstream in the first direction.
In an embodiment of the present invention, an opening angle greater than 0 but less than or equal to 20 degrees is formed between the paired confinement electrode units.
In an embodiment of the present invention, a ratio of opening distances between the paired confinement electrode units at two ends in the first direction is 1 to 2.8.
In an embodiment of the present invention, a ratio of opening distances between the paired confinement electrode units at two ends in the first direction is 1.9 to 2.4.
As described above, the ion optical device of the present invention comprises one or more pairs of confinement electrode units arranged opposite to each other at two sides of the first direction in a space and extending along the first direction; a power supply device for applying opposite radio-frequency voltages to the pairs of confinement electrode units respectively and forming on the confinement electrode units a plurality of DC potentials which are distributed in a second direction substantially orthogonal to the first direction so as to form a potential barrier in the second direction over at least a portion of the length of the first direction; at least one first area and one second area positioned in the space at two sides of the potential barrier in the second direction; and a control device connected with the power supply device for controlling the output of the power supply device to change the potential barrier so as to manipulate the transfer of the ions transported or stored in the first area to the second area through the potential barrier in different ways based on the mass to charge ratio or mobility of the ions, thereby improving the ion utilization efficacy of other downstream devices operating synchronously therewith.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below through specific examples. Those skilled in the art may easily learn other advantages and functions of the present invention from the content disclosed in the specification. The present invention also may be implemented or applied through other different embodiments, and what details described in the present invention may be modified or changed based on different views and applications without departing from the spirit of the present invention. It should be noted that, in case of no conflict, embodiments of this application and features of the embodiments may be combined with each other.
In particular, as shown in
Reference may be made to
When it is desired to separate ions of different mass to charge ratios, the DC potential DC1 of outermost electrodes 101 and 106 may be raised, while the DC potential DC3 of intermediate electrodes 103 and 104 may be stepped down gradually. At this time, the ions stored in the first area may begin to enter the intermediate second area proximal to the axial direction through the W-shaped potential barrier. When DC3 voltage drops to 0.5V, ions with a mass to charge ratio of 5000 Th may enter the second area, as shown in
During this process, since pseudo potential barriers formed by the radio-frequency voltages are of different heights, ions of different mass to charge ratios enter the second area through the W-shaped potential barrier successively at different potential barrier intensities. Ions entering the second area will continue to be constrained by a quadrupolar field formed by the radio-frequency voltages of the electrodes 103 and 104 and are transported further forward. The finally formed overall effect is that the ions exit the ion optical device sequentially from large to small in terms of the mass to charge ratio through the extraction electrode 110.
One advantage of this device is that ions of different masses that are introduced from upstream may form an enrichment effect through a mass number according to a preset of a downstream mass analyzing and filtering device before being transported to the downstream mass analyzing and filtering device, so as to cooperate with a device incorporating a quadrupole mass analyzer, for example as shown in
By changing voltages affecting the barrier height, in particular by adjusting its change speed, certain ions may be polymerized in close time segments, while ions whose mass range is several times this range may be extracted at a next time segment. Such characteristics are of great importance to the extension of a mass-to-charge ratio dynamic range of the time of flight mass spectrometer.
When a height variation speed of potential barriers or potential wells formed in the device changes, the mass to charge ratio separation effect may be further improved.
It should be noted that the ion optical device depends on the ion potential barrier in the second direction orthogonal to the first direction to distinguish ions, so that keeping the potential barrier constant in a possible ion transition region is very important for the improvement of performances of the ion optical device to distinguish ions of different mass numbers. As for the distinguishing potential barriers at different axial positions, the heights in the second orthogonal direction may change at different axial positions due to the field penetration of the end extraction electrode 110, etc., in the axial direction, thereby affecting the separation efficiency of different ions.
To solve this problem, as shown in
It should be noted that the opening angle is not the larger the better. When the opening angle is greater than 35 degrees, a rapid decrease in a polar spacing (also referred to as field radius) may cause the ions to experience an excessively strong radio-frequency potential barrier at an axial end. Although the ions may be almost compressed into a point space smaller than 1 mm, they are unable to pass through the end extraction electrode 110 in the form of a focused ion beam, but are consumed in band-shaped confinement electrodes due to an accompanying strong quadrupole DC deflecting field. When the opening angle is less than 35 degrees, although the ions can exit the ion optical device through the extraction electrode 110, barrier height variations at different axial positions are very severe, and therefore the resolution of ions may also be disrupted severely. For this, as shown in
It should also be noted that for a modern time of flight system of high pulse repetition rate, the ions ejected may be further adjusted by applying additional pulse voltages on the extraction electrode 110 through the controller 300. For example, in the above device, when a −30V/−10V square wave with a duty cycle of 30% and a frequency of 50 KHz is applied to the potential of the extraction electrode (Skimmer), poor conditions for the polar spacing at the inlet may be improved. For example, ion clusters with an original width of 220 microseconds between the electrodes at the inlet may be compressed into a plurality of short pulse clusters each having a width of about 20 microseconds. For each specific extraction time, since the mass to charge ratio range of the ions ejected is highly confirmable, it is possible to obtain a repulsion pulse delay time of the time of flight mass analyzer through a predicted average dynamic mass variation of the extracted ions, such that time of flight instruments ranging from high speed to a repetitive pulse rate of 50 KHz may make full use of ions of various mass to charge ratios in the future. For an existing time of flight system of 10 KHz, such modulations may allow ions with a 1.5-fold mass to charge ratio range to be adjusted into pulses with a width of about 30 microseconds instead of bottom separation, and mass distinguishing-synchronous mass analysis and detection may also be achieved quite well.
In particular, as shown in
The above embodiments illustrate the principle and functions of the present invention through examples simply and are not intended to limit the present invention. Those familiar with the technology may make modifications or changes to the above embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, all equivalent modifications or changes accomplished by the ordinary staff in this technical field without departing from the spirit and technical idea disclosed in the present invention are intended to be covered by the claims appended below.
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